getrandom(2)                                            System Calls Manual                                            getrandom(2)

NAME
       getrandom - obtain a series of random bytes

LIBRARY
       Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/random.h>

       ssize_t getrandom(void buf[.buflen], size_t buflen, unsigned int flags);

DESCRIPTION
       The  getrandom()  system call fills the buffer pointed to by buf with up to buflen random bytes.  These bytes can be used to
       seed user-space random number generators or for cryptographic purposes.

       By default, getrandom() draws entropy from the urandom source (i.e., the same source as the /dev/urandom device).  This  be‐
       havior can be changed via the flags argument.

       If  the urandom source has been initialized, reads of up to 256 bytes will always return as many bytes as requested and will
       not be interrupted by signals.  No such guarantees apply for larger buffer sizes.  For example, if the call  is  interrupted
       by a signal handler, it may return a partially filled buffer, or fail with the error EINTR.

       If the urandom source has not yet been initialized, then getrandom() will block, unless GRND_NONBLOCK is specified in flags.

       The flags argument is a bit mask that can contain zero or more of the following values ORed together:

       GRND_RANDOM
              If  this bit is set, then random bytes are drawn from the random source (i.e., the same source as the /dev/random de‐
              vice) instead of the urandom source.  The random source is limited based on the entropy that can be obtained from en‐
              vironmental  noise.  If the number of available bytes in the random source is less than requested in buflen, the call
              returns just the available random bytes.  If no random bytes are available, the behavior depends on the  presence  of
              GRND_NONBLOCK in the flags argument.

       GRND_NONBLOCK
              By  default, when reading from the random source, getrandom() blocks if no random bytes are available, and when read‐
              ing from the urandom source, it blocks if the entropy pool has not yet been initialized.  If the  GRND_NONBLOCK  flag
              is set, then getrandom() does not block in these cases, but instead immediately returns -1 with errno set to EAGAIN.

RETURN VALUE
       On success, getrandom() returns the number of bytes that were copied to the buffer buf.  This may be less than the number of
       bytes requested via buflen if either GRND_RANDOM was specified in flags and insufficient entropy was present in  the  random
       source or the system call was interrupted by a signal.

       On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS
       EAGAIN The requested entropy was not available, and getrandom() would have blocked if the GRND_NONBLOCK flag was not set.

       EFAULT The address referred to by buf is outside the accessible address space.

       EINTR  The  call was interrupted by a signal handler; see the description of how interrupted read(2) calls on "slow" devices
              are handled with and without the SA_RESTART flag in the signal(7) man page.

       EINVAL An invalid flag was specified in flags.

       ENOSYS The glibc wrapper function for getrandom() determined that the underlying kernel does not implement this system call.

VERSIONS
       getrandom() was introduced in Linux 3.17.  Support was added in glibc 2.25.

STANDARDS
       This system call is Linux-specific.

NOTES
       For an overview and comparison of the various interfaces that can be used to obtain randomness, see random(7).

       Unlike /dev/random and /dev/urandom, getrandom() does not involve the use of pathnames or file descriptors.   Thus,  getran‐
       dom() can be useful in cases where chroot(2) makes /dev pathnames invisible, and where an application (e.g., a daemon during
       start-up) closes a file descriptor for one of these files that was opened by a library.

   Maximum number of bytes returned
       As of Linux 3.19 the following limits apply:

       •  When reading from the urandom source, a maximum of 32Mi-1 bytes is returned by a single call to  getrandom()  on  systems
          where int has a size of 32 bits.

       •  When reading from the random source, a maximum of 512 bytes is returned.

   Interruption by a signal handler
       When  reading  from the urandom source (GRND_RANDOM is not set), getrandom() will block until the entropy pool has been ini‐
       tialized (unless the GRND_NONBLOCK flag was specified).  If a request is made to read a large number  of  bytes  (more  than
       256),  getrandom() will block until those bytes have been generated and transferred from kernel memory to buf.  When reading
       from the random source (GRND_RANDOM is set), getrandom() will block until some random bytes  become  available  (unless  the
       GRND_NONBLOCK flag was specified).

       The  behavior  when  a  call to getrandom() that is blocked while reading from the urandom source is interrupted by a signal
       handler depends on the initialization state of the entropy buffer and on the request size, buflen.  If the  entropy  is  not
       yet initialized, then the call fails with the EINTR error.  If the entropy pool has been initialized and the request size is
       large (buflen > 256), the call either succeeds, returning a partially filled buffer, or fails with the error EINTR.  If  the
       entropy  pool has been initialized and the request size is small (buflen <= 256), then getrandom() will not fail with EINTR.
       Instead, it will return all of the bytes that have been requested.

       When reading from the random source, blocking requests of any size can be interrupted by a signal handler  (the  call  fails
       with the error EINTR).

       Using getrandom() to read small buffers (<= 256 bytes) from the urandom source is the preferred mode of usage.

       The  special treatment of small values of buflen was designed for compatibility with OpenBSD's getentropy(3), which is nowa‐
       days supported by glibc.

       The user of getrandom() must always check the return value, to determine whether either an error  occurred  or  fewer  bytes
       than requested were returned.  In the case where GRND_RANDOM is not specified and buflen is less than or equal to 256, a re‐
       turn of fewer bytes than requested should never happen, but the careful programmer will check for this anyway!

BUGS
       As of Linux 3.19, the following bug exists:

       •  Depending on CPU load, getrandom() does not react to interrupts before reading all bytes requested.

SEE ALSO
       getentropy(3), random(4), urandom(4), random(7), signal(7)

Linux man-pages 6.03                                         2023-02-08                                                getrandom(2)